China Housing Prices

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#1
First China house price dip in two years
AFP JUNE 02, 2014 12:15AM

Home prices in major Chinese cities posted their first monthly decline in nearly two years in May, an independent survey shows, providing new evidence the once red-hot market is losing steam.

The average price of a new home in 100 major cities declined this month by 0.32 per cent from April to 10,978 yuan ($1902) per square metre, according to the China Index Academy (CIA), the first fall since June 2012.

Prices dropped in 62 cities and were unchanged in one, according to the academy, the research unit of real estate website operator Soufun.

The biggest monthly fall was in Shantou, in the southern province of Guangdong, where prices slumped 3.64 per cent on April.

"Rising market supply and sharp falls in transactions have put relatively heavy pressure on property developers' sales, leading some to beef up promotions and adjust their pricing strategy," CIA said in a statement.

Year on year, new home costs rose by 7.84 per cent in May, 1.22 percentage points lower than April and the fifth consecutive month the increase slowed, CIA said.

But, in 31 of the 100 cities, prices fell on an annual basis, with those in Wenzhou -- a centre of private enterprise and lending in the eastern province of Zhejiang -- dropping most of all, down 8.30 per cent.

The survey added to signs that China's property market is cooling, with analysts pointing to factors including stringent bank loan criteria, expectations of falling prices, and financial trouble among developers.

China's government has sought for more than three years to contain rising property values, while also promising to add to the supply of affordable housing, as price increases stoke discontent among ordinary citizens unable to afford new homes.

Market control measures have included restrictions on purchases of second and third homes, higher minimum down-payments and taxes in some cities on multiple and non-locally owned homes.

But, at the same time, local authorities in the country make much of their income from land sales to developers, and have often rushed to loosen limits on purchases when property prices have fallen.

Among China's 10 biggest cities, Nanjing had the biggest fall in May, with prices going down 1.36 per cent month-on-month, the CIA statement showed.

Only two -- Beijing and the northern port of Tianjin -- had new home prices increase, with the average cost in the Chinese capital rising 0.69 per cent from April to 33,472 yuan per square metre.

That was up 22.39 per cent from a year ago, narrowing from a 23.94-per cent increase the previous month, CIA said.

China's commercial capital Shanghai recorded the average cost of a new home fall to 32,388 yuan per square metre, down 0.43 per cent from a month ago.

Year on year, the price went up by 14.59 per cent, compared with a 15.34-per cent gain in April, the statement said.
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#2
Haha despite the small uptick in pmi it seems the property 'cooling' might be gaining traction. High property price with no yield support never ends well

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#3
China’s property bubble slowly deflating
AAP JULY 08, 2014 12:10PM

HOUSING prices in major Chinese cities have fallen for a second consecutive month in June, an independent survey shows, providing more evidence of a deflating property bubble.

The average price of a new home in 100 major cities was 10,923 yuan ($1920) per square metre this month, down 0.50 per cent from May, the China Index Academy (CIA) said in a regular monthly survey.

Prices had dropped 0.32 per cent month-on-month in May, the first such decline in nearly two years, but the academy said the pace of the fall accelerated in June.

Prices fell in 71 cities and rose in just 29, it said.

China has long sought to contain rising property prices, while also promising to increase the supply of affordable housing, as surging costs stoke discontent among ordinary citizens unable to afford new homes.

Market control measures have included restrictions on purchases of second and third homes, higher minimum down-payments and taxes in some cities on multiple and non-locally owned homes.

At the same time, local governments, which make much of their income from land sales to developers, have sought to find ways to loosen restrictions when property prices have fallen.

Last week, the city of Hohhot in the northern region of Inner Mongolia appeared to drop limits on the purchase of second homes by saying it would not require information on buyers’ previous transactions, but quickly scrapped the change after media reports.

Hohhot’s home prices rose 0.86 per cent in June from a month earlier to an average 7064 yuan ($1210) per square metre, making it one of the top 10 performers among 100 cities, according to the survey.

On a year-on-year basis, prices in the surveyed cities rose 6.48 per cent in June, 1.36 percentage points less than the annual rise in May and the sixth month of shrinking annual increases, it added.

Of China’s 10 biggest cities, only commercial hub Shanghai recorded a month-on-month increase in July with the average price rising 0.25 per cent to 32,469 yuan ($5561) per square metre, it said.

Capital Beijing fell 0.61 per cent to 33,269 yuan ($5698) per square metre in June, but remained the most expensive city, the survey showed.
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